Published by Jarrolds, United Kingdom
Seller: Q's Books Hamilton, Hamilton, NSW, Australia
Hard Cover. Condition: Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Poor. slight water damage to rear pages, however text is crisp and readable throughout, previous owners name evident.
US$ 342.71
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. 2nd Edition. Second impression of Hawk's debut novel, written during her internment at Holloway Prison. This copy signed by the author on the title page and dated the year of publication. 8vo. 128pp. Black cloth lettered in gold at the spine. Cloth just a little marked in places, and lightly chafed at several extremities. A single short repaired tear to the margin of one leaf. A very good, bright copy, albeit printed on quite cheap wartime paper-stock. No dust wrapper. Hawks' novel was anonymously re-written prior to publication by Henry Williamson (in a letter dated 26th August 1945 to his long-time friend and subsequent biographer Lois Lamplugh, Williamson states "I rewrote a book for someone recently, it comes out soon with Jarrolds, called 'What Hope for Green Street?' After that, the first-author (whose work was jejune and only partly readable) must dree her own weird. I'll give no more advice.") The full extent of Williamson's rewrite is not possible to determine. The dust wrapper for Hawks' fourth novel, 'A Sparrow for a Farthing' (1950), notes that Hawks' debut "was discovered and launched by Henry Williamson" and Hawks was clearly thankful for his assistance, dedicating her second novel, 'Time is my Debtor' (1947), "Gratefully to Henry Williamson". Despite this we have found no evidence that the two knew each other or ever met, despite both being born and brought up in the same area of South East London, and both being members of the British Union of Fascists. An exceptionally scarce book (we have only ever handled a single copy previously), and even more so with the author's signature. Olive Hawks (1917-1992) was a leading female member of the British Union of Fascists. She became the party's Women's Organiser in Lewisham in 1934, appointed the prospective parliamentary candidate for Camberwell in 1937 and its national Chief Woman's Organiser by 1940. She was interned for four years as a Nazi sympathiser in 1940 and it was during this period that she wrote her first novel. It appears that she abandoned her Fascist sympathies after the war, publishing three further novels and a play before emigrating with her second husband and two sons. Signed by Author(s).
Published by Jarrolds Publishers Limited [1945], London, 1945
Seller: Antiquates Ltd - ABA, ILAB, Wareham, Dorset, United Kingdom
First Edition
US$ 1,028.14
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketFirst edition. 128pp. Original publisher's black cloth boards lettered in gilt, with the unclipped green dustwrapper. Minor shelf-wear, chipping to edges, losses to spine with some further marks. A note on the front free endpaper in Williamsonâs hand: 'I rewrote a rather crude TSS for a newcomer, & I suppose about 60% of this is mine - but not the characters. I did dialogue & improved some scenes.' Henry Williamson's copy of British novelist and fascist Olive Hawks's (1917- 1992) debut novel written during her internment in Holloway prison, which he heavily edited for publication. An inserted printed email to Anne William notes a transcription of a letter, dated August 1945, from Williamson to friend and eventual unofficial biographer Lois Lamplugh: 'I rewrote a book for someone recently, it comes out soon with Jarrolds, called 'What Hope for Green Street?' After that, the first-author (whose work was jejune and only partly readable) must dree her own weird. I'll give no more advice.') Both Hawks and Williamson were members of the BUF, and grew up in South East London, though no correspondence between them or accounts of their ever meeting are in evidence. However, some literary relationship must have existed for the dust wrapper of Hawks's fourth novel to state she was 'discovered and launched by Henry Williamson'. Hawks also previously dedicated her second novel Time is my Debtor (London, 1947), 'Gratefully' to Henry Williamson. Olive Hawks joined the British Union of Fascists in 1933 and was a frequent contributor to various BUF publications including The Fascist Week, Action, and The Blackshirt. Hawks became less vocal with her fascist views after spending four years interned at Holloway Prison as a Nazi sympathiser. Henry Williamson (1895-1977), novelist and writer on natural history and the English countryside, is predominantly remembered as the author of Tarka the Otter (1927) for which he won the Hawthornden Prize. His wartime experiences on the Western Front having altered his life inexorably, he spent the remainder of his post-war life in Devon, Norfolk and Suffolk, writing naturalistic novels very much in the romantic tradition. Size: 8vo.